Goals Extra

An alternate way to think about progression in Charge

- By othelarian


It's sometimes easier to grasp how a character progresses by declaring goals and see if they manage to reach them. Here you, dear reader, will find a way to simulate this.

My Words, My Goals

What is a Goal?

A goal is something a character wants to accomplish, like a mission or a quest. It's also a way to define what the character has to do, what they up for.

A character can have a single important goal, or multiple small ones. These can be set at creation or emerge during play.

When defining a goal for their character, a player has to think about two things:

  • The goal's name
  • The goal's difficulty

The name must be detailed enough for everyone, leaving little room about if the goal is progressing or not.

The difficulty can be easy, medium or hard.

Advancing a Goal

A goal has an associated clock with 8 segments (see options later for more ideas on this point). When a character makes progress towards one of their goals it's time to tick segments, depending on the goal's difficulty:

DifficultyNumber of segments ticked
Easy3
Medium2
Hard1

Note: to follow the chassic Charge progression, a good guideline is to ask for the progression at the end of a session.

Finishing a Goal

When a goal's clock is full, the goal is complete, and the character receives a number of talent dots based on the difficulty.

DifficultyNumber of talent dots gained
Easy1
Medium2
Hard3

The character can apply their freshly acquired talent dots immediately, but must keep it thematic to the goal. For example, it may not be a good choice to put a dot into Muscle if the goal is "writing a delicate recipe with flowers as main ingredient".

Dial: Rolling to Advance

Instead of automatically ticking a number of segments when a goal progresses, it's possible to roll to see if it advances even partially, or not.

As Charge is a narrative game at its heart, to determine the dice pool follow this guideline:

  • Did the character take a risk just to advance their goal?
  • Did working on the goal impact the character (condition related, etc)?

If it's complicated, here a fast and simple rule: use 2 dice.

The number of segments ticked depends on the result and the difficulty.

ResultNameWhat it means
1-3Bad OutcomeNo segments ticked
4-5Partial Success-1 segment ticked (so no tick at all for easy)
6Full SuccessTick segments normally
66Critical Success+1 segment ticked (so 4 segments for easy)

Dial: Rolling to Resolve

Another option is to roll to resolve the goal. The 2 ideas behind rolling to resolve are:

  • Add a way to create more narrative around the goal's resolution
  • Authorize a player to test their luck and try to finish a goal earlier

The roll is similar to an Action Roll, with the number of dice rolled related to the goal clock's status:

Clock's statusNumber of segments tickedequivalent in action dot
Less than 1/4 of the clock0-2No roll, it's too soon
Between 1/4 and 1/23-4Like having 0 dot
Between 1/2 and 3/45-61 dot
More than 3/472 dot
Full clock83 dot

Note: "number of segments ticked" is for a 8 segment clock.

Time to discover how to read the result:

ResultWhat happens
1-3The goal is lost, it's a failure
4-5Partial success, one less talent dot or suffer a consequence
6Success! Get your talent dots!
66Critical Success! Get one more talent dots than expected!

Dial: Changing the Clock

It's totally possible to change the default clock, to accelarate how often players obtain milestones. A good idea before doing so is to reread the clock chapter.

Also, if you want to character progression harder, try a new clock: the 12 segment clock!

Credits

The original idea comes from Ironsworn's vows. Goals are a humble adaptation of them for Charge.

Special thanks to LynnJones who enhance the readibility, RP for the useful feedback to make it more Charge, and therabidbanana for the progression guideline.

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